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Modal logic, or (less commonly) intensional logic is the branch of logic that deals with sentences that are qualified by modalities such as can, could, might, may, must, possibly, and necessarily, and others. Any logical system making use of modal operators, such as possibly, or necessarily is thus also called a modal logic. Modal logics are characterized by semantic intensionality: non-modal logics all have the feature that the truth value of a complex sentence is determined by the truth values of its sub-sentences. They are thus extensional. In modal logics, by contrast, this does not hold: both "Bush is president" and "2+2=4" are true, yet "Necessarily, Bush is president" is false, while "Necessarily, 2+2=4" is true. Necessity and possibility are the most widely discussed modalities in work on modal logic, and most work on necessity and possibility focuses on the so-called alethic modalities, but there are other senses of necessity and possibility, and other modalities as well.

A formal modal logic represents modalities using modal sentential operators. The basic set of modal operators are usually given to be and . In alethic modal logic the represents necessity and the possibility. A sentence is said to be

1 Metaphysical and other modalities

1.1 Alethic, epistemic

Modal logic is most often used for talk of the so-called alethic modalities (from the Greek aletheia, truth): "it is necessarily the case that..." or "it is possibly the case that...." These (which include metaphysical modalities, logical modalities, and subjunctive modalities) are most easily confused with epistemic modalities (from the Greek episteme, knowledge): "It is certainly true that..." and "It may (given the available information) be true that..." In ordinary speech both modalities are often expressed with the same words; the following contrasts may help:

A person, Jones, might reasonably say both (1) I am certain that Bigfoot does not exist; it's impossible, and (2) sure, Bigfoot possibly could exist. What Jones means by (1) is that given all the available information, there is no question remaining as to whether Bigfoot exists. This is an epistemic claim. By (2) he means that things might have been otherwise. He does not mean "it's possible that Bigfoot exists--for all I know." (So he is not contradicting (1).) Rather, he is making the metaphysical claim that it's possible for Bigfoot to exist, even though he doesn't.

From the other direction, Jones might say (3) it's possible that Goldbach's conjecture, but also possible that it is false, and also (4) if it is true, then it is necessarily true, and not possibly false. Here Jones means that it is epistemically possible that it is true or false, for all he knows (Goldbach's conjecture has not been proven either true or false). But if there *is* a proof (heretofore undiscovered), then that would show that it is not logically possible for Goldbach's conjecture to be false—there could be no set of numbers that violated it. Logical possibility is a form of alethic possibility; (4) makes a claim about whether it is possible for a mathematical truth to have been false, but (3) only makes a claim about whether it is possible that the mathematical claim turns out false, for all Jones knows, and so again Jones does not contract himself.

Epistemic possibilities also bear on the actual world in a way that metaphysical possibilities do not. Metaphysical possibilities bear on ways the world might have been, but epistemic possibilities bear on the way the world may be (for all we know). Suppose, for example, that I want to know whether or not to take an umbrella before I leave. If you tell me "It's possible that it is raining outside"--in the sense of epistemic possibility--then that would weigh on whether or not I take the umbrella. But if you just tell me that "It's possible for it to rain outside"--in the sense of metaphysical possibility--then I am no better off for this bit of modal enlightenment.

The vast bulk of philosophical literature on modalities concerns metaphysical rather than epistemic modalities. (Indeed, most of it concerns the broadest sort of metaphysical modality--that is, bare logical possibility). This is not to say that metaphysical possibilities are more important to our everyday life than epistemic possibilities (consider the example of deciding whether or not to take an umbrella). It's just to say that the priorities in philosophical investigations are rarely set by importance to everyday life--and that should be surprising to no-one.



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